01-29-2012
In complement to corona's last post I would add that in the rules you agreed on, there was a mention about searching the forums first, If you did so, you would have found numerous posts on the subject, especially:
https://www.unix.com/answers-frequent...rithmetic.html
So you have posted in terms of "Reading many posts in the forum e.g. "etc.." none solve my problem!
And your post would have then be read with great attention... and awaken the ape's curiosity in most of us, but the way you present things make us more wonder if we are dealing with someone too lazy to do a little search a some reading or a student trying to disguise a classwork or homework and so not being clear on what he actually wants afraid to be caught...
Why can you not use the given solution?
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I would like to find out how can i calculate a date which is 3 months ago. I intend to run a cron job on the 1st of every month, and calculate the month 4 months earlier from the date. For example, if today's date is 1st May 2007, i would like to return 012007( January 2007).
i can get... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: new2ss
1 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello All,
I need a bash shell script to find out a day from the date.For example we give the date(20100227/YYYYMMDD) then we get the day 'Saturday'.
Thanks in advance,
Satheesh (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: satheesh4093
5 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I'm trying to create a shell script (#!/bin/sh) which should tell me the age of a file in minutes...
I have a process, which delivers me all 15 minutes a new file and I want to have a monitoring script, which sends me an email, if the present file is older than 20 minutes.
To do... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: worm
10 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am unable to get this KSH script to work. Can someone help. I've been told this should work with KSH93. Which I think I have on Solaris 10.
If I do a grep -i version /usr/dt/bin/dtksh I get
@(#)Version M-12/28/93d
@(#)Version 12/28/93
@(#)Version M-12/28/93
This is correct for... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: thibodc
5 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I wrote the day calculator also in bash. I would like to now, that is it good so?
#!/bin/bash
datum1=`date -d "1991/1/1" "+%s"`
datum2=`date "+%s"`
diff=$(($datum2-$datum1))
days=$(($diff/(60*60*24)))
echo $days
Thanks in advance for your help! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kovacsakos
3 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have two problems, and it would be great if someone could help me:
The first line does not calculate. I have checked the origin term to calculate the variables
and the result is OK. Normal substactions with $xx -100 work, but not in this constallation. I tried it with "| bc" and no result... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pieter0815
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Team,
We have a requirement as follows.
If a date 20141220 as parameter to the script, then the script has to return the output as 20141219.
i.e given date - 1.
The requirement is simple. But it should satisfy leap year, the months having 31 and 30 days, the date in which day light... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: kmanivan82
9 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I need to write a bash script that when i enter two ip address, it will calculate summerize address for them.
Examlpe:
192.168.1.27/25
192.168.1.129/25
Result will be:
192.168.1.0/24
can you help me with this script?
I even dont know how to start with it (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Miron
3 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to use awk to calculate the average of all lines in $2 for every file in a directory. The below bash seems to do that, but I cannot figure out how to capture the string before the _ as the output file name and have it be tab-delimeted. Thank you :).
Filenames in... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
3 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
How to check the day name,is it saturday in bash shell script.
If dayname = saturday then
run the full load
else
run just the incremental loads
end if
Thank you very much for the helpful information. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cplusplus1
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
blaze-add
BLAZE-ADD(1) BlazeBlogger Documentation BLAZE-ADD(1)
NAME
blaze-add - adds a blog post or a page to the BlazeBlogger repository
SYNOPSIS
blaze-add [-pqCPV] [-b directory] [-E editor] [-a author] [-d date] [-t title] [-k keywords] [-T tags] [-u url] [file...]
blaze-add -h|-v
DESCRIPTION
blaze-add adds a blog post or a page to the BlazeBlogger repository. If a file is supplied, it adds the content of that file, otherwise an
external text editor is opened for you. Note that there are several special forms and placeholders that can be used in the text, and that
will be replaced with a proper data when the blog is generated.
Special Forms
<!-- break -->
A mark to delimit a blog post synopsis.
Placeholders
%root%
A relative path to the root directory of the blog.
%home%
A relative path to the index page of the blog.
%page[id]%
A relative path to a page with the supplied id.
%post[id]%
A relative path to a blog post with the supplied id.
%tag[name]%
A relative path to a tag with the supplied name.
OPTIONS
-b directory, --blogdir directory
Allows you to specify a directory in which the BlazeBlogger repository is placed. The default option is a current working directory.
-E editor, --editor editor
Allows you to specify an external text editor. When supplied, this option overrides the relevant configuration option.
-t title, --title title
Allows you to specify the title of a blog post or page.
-a author, --author author
Allows you to specify the author of a blog post or page.
-d date, --date date
Allows you to specify the date of publishing of a blog post or page.
-k keywords, --keywords keywords
Allows you to specify a comma-separated list of keywords attached to a blog post or page.
-T tags, --tags tags
Allows you to supply a comma-separated list of tags attached to a blog post.
-u url, --url url
Allows you to specify the url of a blog post or page. Allowed characters are letters, numbers, hyphens, and underscores.
-p, --page, --pages
Tells blaze-add to add a page or pages.
-P, --post, --posts
Tells blaze-add to add a blog post or blog posts. This is the default option.
-C, --no-processor
Disables processing a blog post or page with an external application. For example, if you use Markdown to convert the lightweight
markup language to the valid HTML output, this will enable you to write this particular post in plain HTML directly.
-q, --quiet
Disables displaying of unnecessary messages.
-V, --verbose
Enables displaying of all messages. This is the default option.
-h, --help
Displays usage information and exits.
-v, --version
Displays version information and exits.
ENVIRONMENT
EDITOR
Unless the core.editor option is set, BlazeBlogger tries to use system-wide settings to decide which editor to use.
EXAMPLE USAGE
Write a new blog post in an external text editor:
~]$ blaze-add
Add a new blog post from a file:
~]$ blaze-add new_packages.txt
Successfully added the post with ID 10.
Write a new page in an external text editor:
~]$ blaze-add -p
Write a new page in nano:
~]$ blaze-add -p -E nano
SEE ALSO
blaze-init(1), blaze-config(1), blaze-edit(1), blaze-remove(1), blaze-make(1)
BUGS
To report a bug or to send a patch, please, add a new issue to the bug tracker at <http://code.google.com/p/blazeblogger/issues/>, or visit
the discussion group at <http://groups.google.com/group/blazeblogger/>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008-2011 Jaromir Hradilek
This program is free software; see the source for copying conditions. It is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Version 1.2.0 2012-03-05 BLAZE-ADD(1)